The Arm System Design Kits (also known as Arm CoreLink System Design Kits or SDKs) have been rebranded into Arm Corstone foundation IP.

The Challenge

Businesses increasingly recognise that you need to build technology solutions for IoT that have security designed in at both the hardware and software level, or you are putting your own business and your customers’ security at risk.

With the explosion of devices that incorporate technology and connect to the cloud, IoT, we recognise that designing devices from scratch is time-consuming and increasingly complex. Developingsecure devices that are adequately protected against malicious attacks is a massive concern.

Fig.1 The Arm Musca-A Test Chip Board

A Solution

Both Arm and Sondrel, an Arm Approved Design Partner, aim to promote and deliver the best way forward for customers to get secure, high quality IoT designs to market.

To solve the problem of reducing time-to-market, whilst ensuring a secure solution Arm has developed theArm System Design Kit (SDK) family. The System Design Kit family form the foundation of the Arm Musca program, and Arm worked closely with Sondrel to design the Musca-A test chip, which now powers theArm Musca-Adevelopment board. The board makes designing security into products faster and easier for developers.

The board follows the principles of the Arm Platform Security Architecture (PSA), which provide a common foundation for security design. PSA provides essential ingredients (such as threat models, security analyses, specifications and open-source firmware), spreading best security practices for IoT and allowing security to be consistently designed in, at both a hardware and firmware level. Musca-A provides a reusable SoC reference implementation and a software development environment, to accelerate time to market.

As briefly mentioned above, the Arm Musca-A test chip is based on the Arm Cortex-M33 processor and the Arm SDK-200 System Design Kit. The SDK-200 System Design Kit is a toolbox for SoC designers working on systems that integrate the new Arm TrustZone technology which is now present on the latest Armv8-M processors such as the Cortex-M33 processor. The SDK-200 System Design Kit contains the Arm SSE-200 subsystem, providing a comprehensive secure IoT platform on which to base the chip design. Sondrel engineers were able to extend the security features of the SSE-200 subsystem to thefull system on chip design, specifying and integrating essential subsystems such as connectivity, debug, memory, DfT and I/O connectivity. Working in close collaboration with Arm’s engineering team the Musca-A1 was rapidly developed to produce right first-time silicon.

Fig.2 The Arm Musca-A Block Diagram

In Summary

Many chips require common features. Arm has tailored the SSE-200 subsystem to incorporate these – leaving customers to add their ‘secret sauce’.

Sondrel’s key skill is the ability to integrate the differentiators of customer features quickly & efficiently into a SoC.

Combining Arm’s hardware and software IP with Sondrel’s SoC integration know-how, we have demonstrated how it’s possible for our partners to accelerate the development of sophisticated, secure IoT custom ASICs. It was a great collaboration and good teamwork, producing silicon right first time, and on schedule. This project also gives Sondrel the experience of working with the SDK-200, which will accelerate future designs of SoCs for IoT applications. We look forward to hearing about the secure designs that developers are creating using the Musca-A board!

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